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L18 Heart Disease II..

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BME 301 Lecture Eighteen
Transcript
Page 1: L18 Heart Disease II..

BME 301

Lecture Eighteen

Page 2: L18 Heart Disease II..

Review of Last Time

How do we treat coronary artery disease? CABG PTCA Stent Prevention

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Progression of Heart Disease

High Blood PressureHigh Cholesterol Levels

Atherosclerosis

Ischemia

Heart Attack

Heart Failure

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What is Heart Failure?

Page 5: L18 Heart Disease II..

Heart Failure

Heart failure: Occurs when left or right ventricle loses

the ability to keep up with amount of blood flow

Can involve the heart's left side, right side or both sides

Usually affects the left side first About 5 million Americans are living

with heart failure 550,000 new cases diagnosed each

year

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Quantifying Heart Performance

Ejection Fraction (EF) Fraction of blood pumped out of ventricle

relative to total volume (at end diastole) EF = SV/EDV Normal value > 60% Measured using echocardiography

Normal echocardiogram http://www.kumc.edu/kumcpeds/cardiology/mo

vies/nllongecholabeled.html Dilated cardiomyopathy

http://www.kumc.edu/kumcpeds/cardiology/movies/sssmovies/dilcardiomyopsss.html

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Left Sided Heart Failure Involves left ventricle Systolic failure

Left ventricle loses ability to contract Can't push enough blood into circulation

Diastolic failure Ventricle loses ability to relax; muscle has become

stiff Can't properly fill during resting period between beats

Pulmonary edema Blood coming into left chamber from lungs "backs up,"

causing fluid to leak into the lungs As ability to pump decreases, blood flow slows,

causing fluid to build up in tissues throughout body (edema)

Congestive Heart Failure

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Symptoms of Heart FailureSymptom Why It Happens People May Experience:

Shortness of breath (also called dyspnea)

Blood "backs up" in pulmonary veins (the vessels that return blood from the lungs to the heart) because the heart can't keep up with the supply. Causes fluid to leak into lungs

Breathlessness during activity, at rest, or while sleeping, which may come on suddenly and wake them up. Often have difficulty breathing while lying flat; may need to prop up upper body and head on pillows

Persistent coughing or wheezing

Fluid builds up in lungs Coughing that produces white or pink blood-tinged phlegm.

Buildup of excess fluid in body tissues (edema)

As flow out of heart slows, blood returning to heart through veins backs up, causing fluid build up in tissues.

Swelling in feet, ankles, legs or abdomen or weight gain. May find that shoes feel tight

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Symptoms of Heart FailureSymptom Why It Happens People May Experience:

Increased heart rate

To "make up for" loss in pumping capacity, heart beats faster

Heart palpitations, which feel like the heart is racing or throbbing.

Confusion, impaired thinking

Changing levels of blood substances, such as sodium, can cause confusion

Memory loss and feelings of disorientation.

Lack of appetite, nausea

Digestive system receives less blood, causing problems with digestion

Feeling of being full or sick to their stomach.

Tiredness, fatigue

Heart can't pump enough blood to meet needs of tissues. Body diverts blood away from less vital organs (limb muscles) and sends it to heart & brain.

Tired feeling all the time and difficulty with everyday activities, such as shopping, climbing stairs, carrying groceries or walking.

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Heart Failure Video

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How Do We Treat Heart Failure?

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How Do We Treat Heart Failure?

Heart TransplantCardiac Assist Devices

Artificial Heart http://www.cbsnews.com/htdocs/health/heart/framesource.html

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How Do We Treat Heart Failure?

Heart Transplant

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Heart Transplant 1960s:

First heart transplants performed 1980s:

Anti-rejection meds became available (Cyclosporine)

Today: About 80% of heart transplants are alive two

years after the operation 50% percent survive 5 years

Need: 4,000 patients are on the national patient

waiting list for a heart transplant Only about 2,300 donor hearts become

available for transplantation each year

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Surgical Procedure

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/eheart/transplantwave.html

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Rejection Risk of rejection is highest right after

surgery In one study, first year after transplant:

37% of patients had no rejection episodes 40% had one episode 23% had more than one episode

Induction therapy: Use of drugs to heavily suppress immune

system right after transplant surgery Patients keep taking some anti-

rejection drugs for the rest of their life

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Remember from our vaccine unit:

How Do T Cells Identify Virus Infected Cells? Antigen Presentation All cells have MHC molecules on surface

When virus invades cell, fragments of viral protein are loaded onto MHC proteins

T Cells inspect MHC proteins and use this as a signal to identify infected cells

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MHC Receptors

Two types of MHC molecules Class I MHC molecules are found on all

nucleated cells Class II MHC molecules are found on

antigen presenting immune cells Self-Tolerance

T cells which recognize class I MHC-self antigens are destroyed early in development

When this fails: auto-immune disease Type 1 diabetes

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http://cwx.prenhall.com/bookbind/pubbooks/silverthorn2/medialib/Image_Bank/CH22/FG22_05.jpg

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http://cwx.prenhall.com/bookbind/pubbooks/silverthorn2/medialib/Image_Bank/CH22/FG22_14.jpg

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Donor MHC Matching The greater the difference in peptide

sequences of MHC receptors between donor and recipient: The stronger the immune response The greater the chance of organ rejection

Matching: 200 different histocompatibility antigens Each person has a certain "set“ Odds that 2 unrelated people will have the same

set are about 1 in 30,000 Transplant coordinators try to match

histocompatibility antigens of the donor and the recipient as well as possible to minimize rejection

Page 23: L18 Heart Disease II..

Immunosuppressive Rx Cyclosporine, azathioprine and low-dose

steroids Reduce T-cell activation:

T-helper cell CTL activity

Immuno-compromised state Recipient susceptible to virus-related diseases:

B-cell lymphomas (Epstein-Barr virus) Squamous cell carcinomas (human papilloma virus) Kaposi's sarcoma (a herpes virus) Viral infections (cytomegalovirus)

Graft-versus-host disease: Caused by alloreactive T-cells within the donor

tissue that can cause tissue damage in the recipient

Routine heart biopsies to monitor for rejection

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How To Become An Organ Donor

Three steps:

1. Speak with your family about your decision to donate. Make sure they know about your wish to be an organ donor

2. Sign a Uniform Donor Card, and have two family members sign the card as witnesses

3. Carry the card in your wallet at all times.

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Uniform Donor Card Department of Public Safety (where you obtain

drivers licenses) Download the Uniform Organ Donor Card

http://www.tdh.state.tx.us/agep/become.htm

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Why Inform Your Family

If you haven't told your family you're an organ and tissue donor -- you're not!

Sharing your decision with your family is more important than signing a donor card. In the event of your death, health professionals will ask your family members for their consent to donate your organs and tissues. This is a very difficult time for any family, and knowing your wishes will help make this decision easier for them. They will be much more likely to follow your wishes if you have discussed the issue with them. Remember - signing an organ donor card is NOT enough. Discuss your decision with your family!

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More About Organ Donation http://www.organdonor.gov http://www.tdh.state.tx.us/agep/

become.htm http://www.lifegift.org/default.html http://www.lifegift.org/

UD_Organ_Donation.html http://www.shareyourlife.org/

Page 28: L18 Heart Disease II..

History of Cardiac Devices 1950s and 1960s:

Heart-lung machine Prosthetic materials to close holes between heart chambers Replacement valves Implantable pacemakers Coronary angiography to diagnose/treat coronary artery disease Intra-aortic balloon pump (IABP)

1970s and 1980s: IABP gains wide acceptance as temporary cardiac assist system Cyclosporine, an anti-rejection drug, makes human heart

transplants feasible PTCA to treat coronary artery disease with a balloon catheter External & implantable ventricular assist devices enter clinical

trials 1990s:

External and implantable left ventricular assist devices approved for temporary support as a bridge-to-transplantation

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Requirements of Mechanical Support

Non-thrombogenic blood contacting surface

Pumping action that avoids blood trauma

Variable output Small enough to fit in chest cavity Reliable

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Types of Mechanical Support

Temporary: LVADs Give heart muscle a chance to

rest/recover Bridge to transplantation Failure is not catastrophic

Permanent: Total Artificial Heart Replace damaged heart muscle Failure is catastrophic

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How Do We Treat Heart Failure?

Left Ventricular Assist Devices

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LVAD

http://www.j-circ.or.jp/english/sessions/reports/64th-ss/figures/margulies2.jpg

http://www.todayincardiology.com/199811/S8j00931.GIF

http://nypheart.org/img/rematch.jpg

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LVAD

http://www.texasheartinstitute.org/ve_pump.jpg

http://www.texasheartinstitute.org/velvad2.jpg

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Axial Flow Pumps

Small Continuous, non-pulsatile flow

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/eheart/images/axialpump.jpeg

http://www.texasheartinstitute.org/j2f462s.jpg

http://www.texasheartinstitute.org/J2Syss.jpg

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How Do We Treat Heart Failure?

Artificial Heart

Page 36: L18 Heart Disease II..

Artificial Heart - History

April 4th, 1969 Haskell Karp became first human to

have artificial heart implanted Surgeon Denton Cooley performed

operation

Page 37: L18 Heart Disease II..

Artificial Heart - History Denton Cooley

Mr. Karp has regained organ function indicated the mechanical heart is feasible

Mrs. Shirley Karp He could not say anything I don’t think he was really conscious One day they removed the tube from his throat,

they put a sheet over all the apparatuses in back of him and had they medial take their pictures

Immediately after this was done they put back the tube and opened up everything that had closed up.

Page 38: L18 Heart Disease II..

Artificial Heart - History

Karp survived 5 days with artificial heart

Human heart transplant was performed

Karp died 14 hours later

Page 39: L18 Heart Disease II..

Artificial Heart - History Dr. Debakey

Led team testing artificial heart in animals Dr. Liotta

Principal scientist developing artificial heart Liotta’s proposal:

Even though 4 of 7 calves died after implant Implant heart in human Debakey rejected proposal Liotta secretly went to Dr. Cooley who

agreed IRB was not informed

Page 40: L18 Heart Disease II..

Artificial Heart - History Dr. Cooley

Dr. Debakey seemed to show little interest in ever using it.

Dr. Liotta thought he was just wasting his years in a laboratory

The time had come to really give it a test and the only real test would be to apply it to a dying patient

In those days I didn’t feel like we needed permission

I needed the patients consent I think if I had sought permission from the

hospital, I think I probably would have been dined and we would have lost a golden opportunity

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Artificial Heart - History

Dr. Debakey I was in Washington when I read in the

morning pagers about the use of this artificial heart

I was shocked I didn’t know he had taken it from the

laboratory

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Artificial Heart - History

No more human trials until the 1980s…

Page 43: L18 Heart Disease II..

History of Artificial Heart http://www.cnn.com/

2001/HEALTH/conditions/07/03/artificial.heart/

June 2001 http://discover.npr.org/

features/feature.jhtml?wfId=1123833

August 2001 http://discover.npr.org/

features/feature.jhtml?wfId=1127758

November 2001 http://discover.npr.org/

features/feature.jhtml?wfId=1133260

http://images.usatoday.com/news/_photos/2001-11-30-heartguy.jpg

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History of Artificial Heart• 1958:

• Designed by Drs. Willem Kolff and Tetsuzo Akutsu

• Polyvinyl chloride device • Sustained a dog for 90 minutes

• 1965:• Dr. Willem Kolff • Silicone rubber heart• Tested in a calf

http://www.accessexcellence.org/WN/graphics/

jarvik.jpg

http://www.abiomed.com/images/prodtech/kolff65.jpg

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History of Artificial Heart• 1969:

• Dr. Domingo Liotta• First to be implanted in human as

bridge to transplant • Patient survived for 3 days with

artificial heart and 36 hours more with transplanted heart

• 1982:• Drs. Willem Kolff, Donald Olsen,

and Robert Jarvik, • Jarvik-7• First to be implanted in a human as

destination therapy

http://www.abiomed.com/images/prodtech/liotta.jpg

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http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/artificial-heart-abiocor-diagram.gif

http://www.ps-lk3.de/images/ABIOCOR.JPG

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AbioCor Artificial Heart http://

www.heartpioneers.com/newsimages.html#

Cost: $70-100k

http://www.cardiocaribe.com/newsite/images/articulos/feb02/

abiocor_hand.jpg

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Surgical Procedure Surgeons implant energy-transfer coil in the abdomen The chest is opened and patient is placed on a heart-

lung machine Surgeons remove the right and left ventricles of native

heart. This part of the surgery takes two to three hours Atrial cuffs are sewn to native heart's right and left

atria A plastic model is placed in the chest to determine the

proper placement and fit of the heart in the patient Grafts are cut to an appropriate length and sewn to the

aorta and pulmonary artery The AbioCor is placed in the chest. Surgeons use

"quick connects" -- sort of like little snaps -- to connect heart to the pulmonary artery, aorta and left and right atria.

All of the air in the device is removed The patient is taken off the heart-lung machine

Page 49: L18 Heart Disease II..

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/eheart/transplantwave.html

http://www.louisville.edu/hsc/medmag/ss01/images/abio-prep.gif

http://www.heartpioneers.com/images/news/implant_thumb.jpg

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Assignments Due Next Time

HW8 Presentations:

April 8th

E-mail from Mark Carlson with details Exam Two:

April 13th Will cover Vaccines – Cancer Detection Practice Exam will be posted on Tuesday


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